19 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
19 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
Vamps was written to make cheap backups of DVDs under Linux. Back in
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2003 Metakine published the source code of their M2Requantiser module.
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The idea was to make use of this great piece of software to create a
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transcoder for Linux for shrinking the content of a DVD9. This would
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enable backups on cheap single layer DVDRs (double layer burners weren't
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even available that time). The Metakine requantizer is pretty fast and
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so Vamps was designed not to break this outstanding performance.
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Vamps builds a wrapper around the requantizer to extract the elementary
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MPEG2 video stream from the DVD's program stream, feed it through the
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requantizer and finally re-pack it into the program stream again.
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Besides this, Vamps allows to select audio and subtitle streams that
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should be copied into the output stream. This gives another small gain
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of disk space, since unwanted streams may be discarded.
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Summed up, Vamps is only a very basic, but nevertheless essential tool
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to transcode DVD videos to a smaller size. Vamps does not need to write
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temporary data files, which is a major pro. Vamps is very fast. The
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downside is, that Vamps is not capable to make DVD backups on its own.
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